Exhibit 2.
http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Talk:Intelligent_design/Archive_2#Theory.3FCitizen 1: We have to remove the Biology GRoup category from this article. We cannot have such a poor decision associated wih the bology workgroup.
Citizen 2: I do not agree that Intelligent Design is part of biology, I guess any more than Creationism is, and I can see how silly it would be to have Creationism considered part of Biology - but if the article discusess evolution, and Darwinism- what then? Should not Biology oversee it? Or can that be done best just by individual review and being sure that the article is accurate and neutral? A biologist probably would always know to check out an article that is about a subject famously at odds with biology, but what if the article is about some lesser known thing that - like this article, talks about evolution? Maybe there should be a different mechanism than a category workgroup to alert members of the workgroup-Criticisms of intelligent design .
Citizen 3: Of course discussion of intelligent design--whatever you want to call the content of the claims it makes, theory, "concept," or something else--is germane to biology. We shouldn't remove a workgroup from an article simply because we disagree with how the article is named. In that case, the way forward is to propose a better name, one that biologists (and grammarians--it isn't a "concept" in any case) can agree with. Please do.
In general, what should we call bodies of thought that not everyone wants to bless with the name "theory"? (I personally am willing to call all sorts of absurdities "theories," but scientists have a different usage from mine.) To call it a "hypothesis" implies that it is testable, so that won't do in this case.
Citizen 1 raises an important question: should the "intelligent design" article be assigned to the Biology Workgroup, or not? The Citizen simply speaks ex cathedra on the issue, offering no arguments, which does not help matters.
Citizen 2 concedes that intelligent design is not part of the field of Biology, but disagrees at least that it is obvious the article should therefore be excluded from the workgroup's purview, and presents some options. It is not clear whether Citizen 2 is agreeing with Citizen 1, or not.
Citizen 3 points out that "theory" (which at the time was part of the article name: "intelligent design theory") might be inappropriate in this case, but even if we name the article simply "intelligent design"--and thus making it look less like a serious
theory in biology, managed by the Biology Workgroup--it is still "germane to biology." Citizen 3 might have skipped the bit about "theory," which was distracting and actually argued that the article belongs in the workgroup. Simply to say it is "germane" to biology is not really an argument.
Citizen 2: Actually I don't think this theory/idea is part of biology, although it concerns the origin of living things. For example, phrenology is not neuroscience, and is not health science. It may have been both those things once, but it is not either now. This theory has never been part of biology and is not now. We take biology to mean the science of living things and this theory is not science as accepted by scientists, it is philosophy, and religion -though I guess that the religion category is debatable. Again, and I am no expert in Intelligent Design-but I am an expert in Biology, I have never seen anything written about this intelligent design idea ( including this article) that does not contain an explanation of Darwin's theories and of the theory of evolution- which are, of course, very much part of biology, as a major part of the narrative. That's the only reason I see the Biology workgroup category as legitimate. Intelligent design is not only not a recognized theory in biology, even a disproven one, it relies on a philosophical construct rather than the scientific method and so is not, as I see it, science. That doesn't mean that an article on this topic is not needed. It's just a question of category. "Critical views of intelligent design" could be written entirely as biology and be part of the biology workgroup without question. This article is a kind of "alternative biology".
Citizen 2 here insists that ID is not part of biology--not something that Citizen 1 disagreed with. Citizen 1 merely said that ID is
germane to biology, which is consistent with what Citizen 2 said earlier. But since Citizen 3 was not clear enough, and seemed to be disagreeing with Citizen 1, Citizen 2 assumed that Citizen 3
was arguing that ID is part of biology.
The difficulty at this point in the debate is lack of clarity and focus. Citizen 2 seems to think it is relevant to point out that ID the topic is not
part of Biology the field, but then seems unwilling to draw the definite conclusion that "intelligent design" the article should not be part of the Biology Workgroup. Citizen 3 furthermore could have helped matters by conceding that ID is not part of biology, but replying that does not entail that the article shouldn't be managed by the workgroup.
Along comes Citizen 4:
Citizen 4: I apologize if I am out of line, because I am not a biologist, so it will be too easy perhaps to dismiss my opinion, but here goes anyway because I'm not providing a biological argument, I'm providing an editorial argument.
I would agree with you that this theory/idea is not science by the definition of some, but I would disagree with you that the idea is in the same category as phrenology. I would disagree because phrenology has generally been proven to be quackery. While the idea of intelligent design was assumed to be outdated, but Intelligent Design has not really been disproven. I also disagree that this theory has never been a part of biology. I would submit that some form of a theory of intelligent design was a foundation of biology up and until the origin of species was widely accepted. (Medieval zoological (i.e. academic) works described animals and "why God made them that way.")
I fear that Intelligent Design's credibility has been tainted by its association with people who have an agenda. They are pushing ID mainly because they really don't understand Evolution's undeniable truth and they think that ID somehow disproves Evolutionary Theory. Thus, I can understand why you as a biologist would dismiss Intelligent Design Theory out of hand. Boiling all the verbiage out of it, you think Intelligent Design equals magic and magic does not exist, therefore Intelligent Design does not exist.
... [10 more paragraphs, who knows what they're about because who in his right mind is going to read all that.]
The bombshells laid down are these: "While the idea of intelligent design was assumed to be outdated, but Intelligent Design has not really been disproven." And: "I also disagree that this theory has never been a part of biology. I would submit that some form of a theory of intelligent design was a foundation of biology up and until the origin of species was widely accepted."
This is, not to be too nice about it, a complete waste of time and totally irrelevant. Whether or not Citizen 4 addresses the question at issue--should the article be part of the workgroup?--is completely lost after saying these things. It turns the debate into one that never needed to be had in the first place, about the merits of ID itself.
One might maintain that this is a debate that, somehow, the community must have--it must eventually "duke it out" and come to some uneasy truce on the question. I disagree and strongly, because anybody who has argued much, in any context, knows that hardly ever is anyone's mind ever actually changed, especially not from strongly held views. A debate over the merits of ID is
completely irrelevant to deciding any question about how the article should be written. The alleged merits and demerits of ID belong, in fact, in
the article itself.Later on, we have comments like this:
Citizen 1: Concept was OK. Hypothesis barely acceptable. Theory unacceptable, postulate, maybe ok, conjecture also maybe ok.
This is Citizen 1 speaking ex cathedra (or, as an old professor of mine used to say, "ex catheter") again. But you can hardly fault the good Citizen: there's so much confusion and noise going on by this point, what's the point in spending too much time on it?
Then the Citizen decides to weigh in at greater length:
Citizen 1: Its not a trap for us to reject material because it lacks merit as a scientific concept, its our job as scientists and Citizendium Biology editors to eliminate presentation of concepts that are without merits. We do this, and should do this, with every statement to ensure that the content of the atricles is an acceptable quality. Similarly, with scientific concepts that have been refuted, such as for instance, simple views of Last Common Ancestor, of parts of Lyn Margulis' theories that are poorly supported, or the HIV does not cause AIDS, we do not present them as acceptable, as it would be misleading the reader. Its not an philosophical stance, but an ethical position. We must not as professional scientists knowingly mislead the reader about the science of biology or suppress inconvenient facts. ...
What the question at issue is, at this point, nobody can quite say. There
is the question of whether the article should be assigned to the workgroup, but we're no longer talking about that. We seem to be talking about whether biologists may or may not "eliminate presentation of concepts that are without merits." This is a very ill-formed topic for debate, if the question is whether we should present any information about ID at all, because we most certainly will have
an article about intelligent design. For the good Citizen to seem to argue otherwise is, therefore, a complete waste of time.